Studio International

home

about studio

contributors

contact

Comments

Spacer

 

14/10/05

The Chichu Art Museum

Naoshima, Japan

Since the first inception of museums in the late 18th century, we have, until the present day, seen the development of three different generations of museum. First-generation museums, such as the Louvre, were built upon royalties for their own collection. The second-generation museums took a critical stand against their predecessors; the exhibition space seeks to cut off the art works from the surrounding context by proposing an abstract, uniformed space. Examples include Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum in New York and Mies van der Rohe's National Gallery in Berlin. In third-generation museums, the artists seek to create works that interact with their surroundings. Japanese Architect, Tadao Ando's latest addition to his repertoire of museums - the Chichu Art Museum in Naoshima, Japan - is one such example that features site-specific works.

In Japanese, the word 'chichu' means 'underground' and one would, therefore, tend to imagine a dark, dim space where natural light is cut off. Although part of the access way and the front lobby are extremely dark, the main exhibition space brings in natural light creatively through the two main, geometrically shaped, sunken courts. This is, rather, an 'enclosed above-ground museum'.

Why underground, one might ask? The site of the museum is a place where national forest abounds and was a former salt field. To preserve the existing atmosphere and beauty of the site, Ando has wisely 'buried' the museum underground. Only a series of small concrete openings and geometrical skylights float among the greenery.

The entrance ramp leading down to the entrance lobby has two side walls that incline at an angle of six degrees towards the East. This slightly skewed space sets the mood by heightening the tension and suspense of what is to come. There are five galleries altogether, of various sizes and characters, featuring the works of three artists - Claude Monet, Walter de Maria and James Turrell. In the Monet exhibition space, visitors can view five Monet paintings that are illuminated entirely by natural light streaming in from the four edges of the ceiling. Viewed from the lobby, the exhibition space itself looks like a framed painting. The floor is further given an impressionist touch when laid with 20 x 20 x 20 mm white mosaic marble stones.

Walter de Maria constructed his gallery by laying out 2.2 m diameter spheres and 27 wooden sculptures with gold leaf. As the space is aligned East to West, the appearance of the work changes constantly from sunrise to sunset. The works of James Turrell present light as an art itself and are accompanied by spaces that allow for a unique experience. The distinction between architecture and art works is blurred. It is hard to delineate where the architecture ends to become art works and vice versa.

The triangular court connects the exhibition space of the three artists. On two sides of the walls are circulation ramps. Through a slit of 35 cm, one sees a court lined with broken limestone. Inside the museum, the visitor is brought constantly between light and darkness, between mass and void. Incorporating Ando's favorite material palette of concrete, steel, glass and wood, the Chichu Art Museum has an extremely minimal design. By limiting the architecture to an underground structure and refusing to have an exterior design rising out of the ground, the Museum successfully balances the conflict of being architectural, yet non-monumental. In addition, the artistic approaches of Walter De Maria and James Turrell, and the architectural approach of Tadao Ando, are subsumed into one single place.

Meng Ching Kwah

READERS COMMENTS

 

I visited Chichu Art Museum this year and I can truly say it was the most moving art space experience I have ever had. From the moment you walk in the door you are in a holistic experience of the senses, the mind & the emotions. I would recommend that if you go, be prepared to be swept away!

- Gillian Richards, Fremantle Australia

I have visited this art gallery quite recently and I can say it is the most impressionable and beautiful gallery I have ever seen. The art island of Naoshima itself is one of tradition and it is like a whole other world. The people there are so helpful it almost feels like a second home. I would greatly recommend the gallery as well island as the art is breathtaking.

- Cezka, Liverpool, England

Absolutely silence architecture. Is'nt it formless??

- Anton Siura Yogyakarta, Indonesia

ADD YOUR COMMENT:

Name:

Email: (Your email address will not be published)

Town and country:

Your comment:

Please note that this is a moderated feedback page and all comments are reviewed prior to appearing on this page.

Please enter the code shown above into the box below. This helps us prevent spam messages being logged onto this site:

search

… or go to:

Click on the pictures below to enlarge
 
 
 
 

home | architecture | archive | books | drawing | museology | new media | painting | photography | reports | sculpture |

Copyright © 1893–2010 The Studio Trust. The title Studio International is the property of The Studio Trust and, together with the content, are bound by copyright. All rights reserved